Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:16):
And it's the Consolan chrom Podcast with Harrison Dollars, where
one man staties against me, the wife.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
And tide of the Walls.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
This officer in the battles Preserve or Nation is a
conservative chromin.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Nothing else.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Here our hopes and our journeys continue, and here's Harrison Dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
Welcome to the Conservative Colonel Podcast. I'm your host, Harrison
Dolls and before we get started today, please remember to
leave a five star review on your podcatcher of choice,
whichever one you would like. We are on, of course,
our main platform, Sprinker, but we're also on Apple Podcast, iHeartRadio, Spotify,
(01:31):
Amazon Music, and Audible, cash Box, Deezer Podcast, Addict, Podchaser,
listen to some good pods. We are also on YouTube
and we're fully caught up on YouTube. Rumble is another story,
but we're not gonna talk about that right now. So
I hope you guys are all doing good. I apologize
(01:53):
for the late upload. Y'all are basically getting two episodes
this week, as last week's episode aired three days ago,
not only because it's two in the morning and I
have been working non stop this week in Texas, so
(02:14):
you probably won't have me have a do a long
episode tonight. It depends. We've got some pretty good stuff
to talk about. Yeah, no, I apologize for that. I
live on a farm where there's no Wi Fi whatsoever.
(02:35):
So even with Graves and Sam stepping up for me
last week, they recorded I think Thursday or Friday. No,
it was Friday, so it should have been just a
day late. And of course Friday I didn't have Wi Fi.
(02:55):
Saturday I didn't have WiFi then Sunday to drive out here,
so I didn't get to upload it until Monday. I think,
no Monday or Sunday, I can't remember, But I do
want to apologize for the late upload and highly encourage
(03:17):
are my view my listeners to go listen to that
episode because I give Graves a lot of crap behind
the scenes, but he does a phenomenal job hosting this show,
and Sam did a phenomenal job going into the news.
Those two together are a great team. And just being honest,
(03:41):
I mean, I couldn't do this show a lot of
times without you, Graves. Graves might not listen to this.
I know who's busied this week as well, so that's
why he's not joining me tonight. That and it's two
in the morning. But I can't thank them two enough
for stepping up again, Sam, thank you for coming on
(04:02):
and again special shout out to Graves. He and under
an hour, planned, scripted and recorded an episode and a
long episode of that hour and twenty minute episode and
really saved my bacon. So again, there's a good chance
that this will be shorter because of that, because I
(04:26):
want you to go back and listen to that, because
they go into a lot of great topics, some of
which we're going to be bringing up again soon. The
twenty twenty five election we'll definitely be talking about and
we'll be talking about the Department of Education real soon
on the show. We're going to have a whole episode
dedicated to the Department of Education and kind of really
(04:49):
go into it and kind of our first story tonight
is about the education in Mississippi, but not just in Mississippi.
If it's this bad in Mississippi, how bad is it
at other places? So the University of Mississippi is testing
(05:11):
this on their pharmacy students. This isn't one of them
stupid gender study classes where you go over the fifteen
million genders are something like that. Something you would expect
a class where you would expect this, but they're forcing
them to test on and this is pharmacy students. They're
(05:35):
not learning about medicine health. They're learning about LGBTQ plus health.
And this is under pharmacy six oh six in the
University Mississippi population in rural health. Rural could care less
(06:01):
about this, But here are the learning objectives for this class.
By the way, define key LGBTQA, BCDEFG terminology including terms
of related to gender identities, sexual oritation, and intersectionality. Define
(06:26):
you need healthcare and social denominations of health faced by
the LGBTQ plus individuals individuals not people. Describe methods for
creating inclusive health care environments that respect and affirm these
(06:48):
diverse gender identities and their sexual oritations with an emphasis
on appropriate language. Demonstrate effect communication skills for building trust
and rapport with these patients, including the use of affirming
language and listening techniques. The why inclusions not a matter
(07:13):
of political correctness is the key to growth Jesse Jackson,
that's the quote that's learning adjectives. I have never heard
of anding more stupid in my life. I've said it
before on the show I Am a Jeffersonian. So one
of my mottos is all I want to be is
left alone. And you, in your private life can identify
(07:33):
as an attack helicopter. But just because you identify as
an attack helicopter doesn't.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
Mean it's true.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Science proves their two genders. And just because you feel
like you're an attack helicopter again does not mean you're
an attack helicopter. And forcing people to call you that
is annoying. There a name has been passed down in
my family, so all three of my grandfather, my father,
(08:04):
and I all share the same name. When I go
to a pharmacy, I could go by my first name, Harrison,
but my father and grandfather have the same name. But
instead of letting my grandfather picture choose to go by
the name he's gone by his whole life, they force
him to go by his first name, and he's fine
with that. He's made his peace with that. But we're
(08:29):
gonna focus on this though. We're gonna give a whole
class and a test that is in March, and this
is hilarious. They even put on the first slide and
I got the slides in the Missie Republican Party identifying
identifying LGBTQ plus is not identifying as a part of
(08:52):
this community. Is not to mental illness, are disorder? I
highly disagree. It is definitely a mental disorder. At instead
of helping these people feel comfortable in their skin, are
comfortable with how they were born, or giving them the
help they need, we're baby in them. You can be
(09:14):
an attack, you can be a dog, you can be
a cat, you can be a parrot. Polly Watson medicine.
But you can do all that. And that's on the
first slide or the second slide, technically the first light
I read. But it is a mental ill illness. I
(09:36):
know that's controversial. I don't care. It is one hundred
percent of mental illness, and I will go down on
the ship that it's a mental illness. It's one hundred
percent one and it's stupid that we're acting like it's not. Again,
this went from the gay community to all all this.
(10:01):
I feel bad for the gay community, honestly, you know,
I personally cannot support it as a Christian, but again,
live and let live. I don't care. But the funny
thing is is their whole thing has been stolen by
this stupid crap, A mental disorder that has gotten out
of control of a mental illness, and it is just
(10:22):
getting stupider and stupid and stupid. And this is being
taught an official university. So the Department of Education is
doing a fantastic job making sure everybody's educated. And I
found a video where they were like, I studied blah
blah blah blah blah, and I got a degree. My apologies,
I got a degree in you know, and this is
(10:48):
the actual name, so you know, cancel me if you want.
I got a degree in a Queer African American women's studies.
That's that's an official degree somewhere I don't remember where.
And someone was like, what job can they get with
that degree? And someone put Starbucks, And it made me
(11:08):
laugh because it's true. It's a useless degree. Now, if
you want to go in your own social study articles
and study stuff like this, I could care less. The
colleges and universities and schools pushing this crap is extremely stupid.
My tax got dollars go to fund this crap, and
(11:29):
it pisses me off. And this is coming. I found
it because the state ordered or White actually retweeted it,
and I don't know what he says. I haven't read it.
We'll probably read that beforehand, but you know it's it's
(11:51):
extremely stupid and these slides are completely and utterly.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
Stupid.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
Oh my gosh, here are some of the pronouns they
have on the slide. She her, he him. They then
deserve deserve.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Ichs.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
It's icksen here per per.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Per per.
Speaker 3 (12:25):
What of that person's a kiddy cat? Oh gosh. I
did not need to record this at two in the morning.
I do not need to end my day off the stupidity.
But here we are, here, we are. This is your
education system, America. We used to be number one in
(12:50):
the world. I remember when the University of Mississippi was
a the Harvard of the South, the Harvard of Mississippi.
If you wanted to have a good life here in
Mississippi and make your life better, you go to Old Miss.
I'm wearing an Old Miss cap right now. It's got
Colonel Reb on it. You know my name, Sagan. It's
(13:11):
got the old school block M. And my thing is,
it's extremely sad to see the fall of a university
I love so much. But it's not the same university.
Like everything, the Left is taking it over and instead
of teaching pharmacy, science, history, English math, you know, mass racist.
(13:34):
Now they're pushing their political beliefs. And actually, I think,
let's go. I'm not even gonna go to the slides
yet Shade actually says it. You know, this lesson pain
is just the professor's political ideology being pushed on these
students as a science. As a fact, they will be
(14:01):
And the students that are being graded on that are
being forced to take a test on this for their grade,
so they have to study this bull crap. They have
to be brainwashed. The tax paying dollars to fund this
brainwashing is extremely concerning. And again I mean just all
(14:26):
the crap they have on here. I mean, go check
this out. Honestly, it is just it's made my day.
I've honestly had a great day working in a museum
(14:46):
up in Texas, but a lot of work. I'm exhausted,
and I was like, I don't know if I'm going
to be able to bring the energy. It's two in
the morning, I'm in a hotel room. I can't yell,
I can't you know, talk very loudly, so you might
have to turn me up this episode. But you know,
I start looking at stuff like this in my script
that I wrote a couple days ago, and some stuff
(15:10):
I add throughout the day like this and completely forget
about it because I'm so busy, and go back and
reread it and it blows my mind again putting it
as a science, this isn't a mental disorder, because they
know that's the argument going up against them and they're
trying to get ahead of it now. But it's a
mental disorder. It's a mental illness, and we are just
(15:34):
treating it. And I got that from Jack off the
right side. I never really thought of it like that.
At first. I thought of it as just people being idiots,
just being honest, And now I know some people just
can't help it, and it's sad that we're not getting
them help and again making them feel comfortable in their
(15:55):
own skin. I mean, that is something we all face,
not being comfortable and on skin.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
You know.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
I don't know if I've talked about on the show,
but now I'm a bit overweight, so sometimes I get
a bit uncomfortable. But I don't identify as a skinny person.
I you know what I identify as a billionaire. Where
is my money? If Joe Biden's in office. I could
probably get some file for unemployment, get that, become a
(16:22):
billionaire or something somehow. Probably wouldn't become a billionaire, but
I probably could make a good living sitting at my
house and eating oreos off my belly and getting even fatter.
And it's just I'm over it. I don't even know
(16:45):
how to even express my disappointment in the University of
Mississippi right now, especially in if I'm not mistaken or yeah,
medical center here. This is being taught at the University
of Mississippi Medical Center, Ole Miss and they're teaching this
(17:09):
to pharmacy students. And we wonder why Mississippi is where
it's at. We wonder why kids my age gen zers
go to college and they honestly come back a bit
stupid or are brainwashed into liberal ideology. You know, if
(17:34):
you're going to go to university, people give me this art.
You're supposed to expand your mind, Yes, yes, you're you're
supposed you're supposed to learn things. You're supposed to getting
interacted in mindsets and thinking that you're not used to
one hundred percent. Before I went into college, I was
a full fledged red Republican voted for you know, Tate
reeves out bat eye. If you had an R by
(17:56):
your name, you got my vote. And during college I'm
more into the Jeffersonian conservative I am today, where I
care more about are you going to actually be a
conservative than if you.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Have an R by your name.
Speaker 3 (18:11):
I did that because I grew the conversations outside of
the classroom. Every teacher is going to throw something in there,
but the blatant I mean blatant, no room for debate,
no room for saying, you know, I think this is wrong, Professor,
(18:32):
doctor so and so. I just I cannot agree with this,
and not even getting to debate it, but it could
affect your grade. Even I've had teacher professors, you know,
go after try to go after my GPA because I
just couldn't.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
Agree with them.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
It's happening. If you don't agree with their brainwashing, they
target you until you agree and you're almost bullied into
it and get this Stockholm syndrome where you start to
believe it. I can tell you for a fact, I
went to the University of Mississippi and the brainwashing is
in every I took algebra and the liberal ideology came
(19:11):
up and that was before the matthis racist thing came out,
but I mean they still was pushing it. They push it,
push it, and push it. So when you send your
kids to these colleges, don't be shocked. They don't come
back the same kids. They've been brainwashed for four years
straight with rarely any breaks to breathe, and when they
do breathe, they stay around in these communities. This community
(19:33):
that's steal, brainwashing them and pushing them to try to
fit in to their agenda, and that is to get
more votes, to get more people not really paying attention,
keep their eye away from the ball. And that's what
the education has come to in America. And it's so sad.
(19:53):
I wanted to go to college for a good history
education and I have yet to get that. And it
is just one of the great sorrows of my life
that I had to switch to universities. I'm no longer
a student at the University of Mississippi. I had to
go to the University of Liberty University to even get
(20:14):
a good history education. The bad thing is, there's not
really a place to go to get a great history
education because history as an educational art form is falling apart.
And that's a whole other issue that I'll probably bring
up in the Department of Education. Department of Education episode
where they have used they've twisted history to beyond brain
(20:37):
Washington propaganda pushing. But not only that, they push science, biology,
one oh one, geometry, geology, anything they can twist and turn.
There's going to be thing everything. You know, I had
general studies or something like their social studies, and we
(20:59):
didn't talk about out social studies at all. It was
all about pushing their agenda. And so that's that's really
sad but not shocking, and again another great reason to
get rid of the Department of Education. Bring it back
to the States where it should have always been, and
for high school and from high school down. I honestly
(21:21):
think it should be up to the local communities. I
think the states should should only get involved in the universities.
Even then it should be very very lightly. If you
want to have something flourish, get the government the heck
away from it. But we're going to take a quick
commercial break and when we get back, we're going to
(21:43):
be continuing our crazy crap happening in Mississippi. So we
got two more stories left in Mississippi. And there's some doozies.
So first off, Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hoseman, it is back.
(22:08):
I know a lot of people and again we talked,
Graves talked about this, the rumor's heart attack. We don't
know what happened. We know he walked out. We know
he went to the hospital for the day. Some people
are saying he refused to go to the hospital. He
was trying to tough it out. I doubt that, but
again I don't know for certain, but I do know
a healthy man doesn't just fall over and then say
(22:30):
it was dehydration. I'm I'm not something something's fishy with that.
But I am happy that Delbert Hoseman is okay. I
was praying for him. I disagree with him extremely politically
and think he's a liberal in uh disguised as a Republican,
(22:50):
But that doesn't change the fact that he's a human
being and I do not want any harm to come
to him, you know, I do I want his political
crew over, Yes, but he is still a child of God,
and so I am happy he's back. But I mean,
it didn't take him long to get right back into it.
When it comes to Delbert, Delbert Plane up lying about
(23:19):
not knowing about the bill. On an interview of with
Mornings with Richard Cross and Delbert Hoseman, Plane uplied saying, oh,
I had no idea we had this bill to strip
the auditor of its power, but then goes on to say,
and I think this is what revealed his cars.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
That he's corrupt.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
He's, you know, defending himself with lawyers paid by the state,
but the state's the one attacking him, trying to strip
him of his power. The he brings up the attorney general,
who overcrossed her or authority one hundred percent, who's also
not done a good job also as attorney general. I
(23:59):
know a lot of of times that people have broke
constitutional law in Mississippi. And she's done nothing but sit
on her dead gum hands and uh, sit there and
try to look pretty for the cameras. Same thing Delbert's doing.
And then Delbert goes on to say he's a little man. Uh,
the little guy wants attention again, Delbert, if you haven't
(24:23):
been focusing on that, Delbert saiding this interview, He's like,
I'm focusing on my craft. I got a state to
run because the lieutenant Governor's must powerful position in Mississippi,
So he's like, I have a state to run. I
haven't even focused on this guy, but then goes on
to slander, or not slander, but to go on the offensive.
Are going on an offensive? Tack on shit on shape
auditor stayed White, Shade White, and Shade's official special response
(24:49):
to this was, let's talk some policy. Since you're talking
about coming after me cutting my budget in half, even
though he volunteered to cut his budget, why have you
you continue to waste taxpayer dollars on DEI in our state?
No response from Delbert yet. Why is your chairman and
the age authorizing bills to strip my office of legal
(25:13):
or my legal authority to find taxpayer waste? Why are
we doing this? Are are are? All we are doing?
Is what dot doge is doing for the Trump administration.
Why is another of your chairmen trying to slash my
office budget and force us to fire our auditors, even
(25:36):
after we volunteer to take one million dollars less from
the state general fund this year? Why did you tell
President Trump to go jump in the gulf? Why are
you trying to raise our gas prices? And he ends
this official quote. Shade rights response by saying, you establish
politicians down there act more like democrats in DC every day,
(25:58):
and I couldn't be more It couldn't be more on point.
He asked a lot of great questions to Delbert, and
I guarantee you Delbert's never want to respond because he's
got more important matters to deal with. And Delbert goes
on to try to paint a picture of White as
(26:19):
this corrupt individual trying to get his five minutes of
fame and using Delbert to do it. But Delbert's record
is just full of holes. And really, if you know
anything about state politics after and you watch this, you
know for a fact that as soon as that bill
failed to strip the auditor of its power to look
(26:42):
for waste in our government, among other things. And we've
talked about that a couple episodes ago, Delbert is now
going after their budget and trying to slash it by
two million. When they were already trying to get say hey,
we don't want you take a million of this back,
we don't need They had probably budgeted and found a
(27:02):
way to cut that waste that they didn't want to
our money that they didn't think they needed anymore. That's great,
that's he's honestly doing his job. He was like, you
know what, my office doesn't need this money. You can
take some of it back and maybe put it in
something that benefits the state of Mississippi. But no, no, no,
(27:23):
not Delbert. He wants to cut it even more to
for Shade to firesome auditors to Foreshade to have to
really rash his resources, hoping that that's that gets the
message across that you need to back off. That's what
this all is. This is Delbert doing the same thing
he always does, trying to rule Mississippi with an iron fist.
(27:47):
Delbert thinks he's the King of Mississippi. I might put
that on a T shirt all held Delbert the King
of Mississippi, because Delbert, that's just one hundred percent what
Delbert does. Delbert is a career politician. Delbert is in
his late seventies. If I'm not mistaken, like I'm let
(28:16):
me double check real quick. Delbert is seventy seven. Yeah,
he's in his late seventies. By the time he gets
out of this office, he'll be seventy eight, seventy nine maybe,
And so if he runs for governor, he'll be the
oldest governor I think in Mississippi history, in his late
eighties almost And again, the man just had a health crisis.
(28:41):
He should not be running, but he's going to because
he wants to keep that power. Now, yes, he's gonna
have to let some of it go to be governor,
but he's turned out as governor. So he's doing the
next best thing. What's the second most powerful position in Mississippi,
the governorship. And he wants to be the figurehead of
this museum. And don't you think Delbert has not already
(29:02):
got a replacement for him as lieutenant governor with an
R by his name. The Democrats are still gonna put
someone up, try to have a good fight. They're gonna
put on a show. So it looks like we are
if we don't vote for this guy, we're going to
get a Democrat in the most power. That's del I
can guarantee you that's Delbert's plan. So you get this
Republican this is lieutenant governor. That's just a puppet for
(29:24):
Delbert to hold onto state power for four to eight
more years. Again, he wants to rule Mississippi with an
iron fist. He acts like a dictator sometimes h if
you disagree with him, Oh don't worry, I wipe out
your seat in my Senate, you know. And he's done that. Uh,
you don't like it, I'm going to lie and slender
(29:46):
you six ways till Sunday like you did Chris. Chris
challenged him, called him out on his bull crap, and
everybody's finally waking up. But it's too late. You're stuck
with Delbert. And that's Mississippi's fault. Mississippi didn't dig deep
enough when it came to our chance to get rid
of Delbert. And in this once and for all, and
you know, Shade asked a lot of great things. You know,
(30:11):
Delbert's anti Trump. He's trying to raise our gas type taxes.
He is against us looking for waste in the state
of Mississippi. But you know, all Republicans should be following
Trump's lead and trying to cut government waste because it's
become obvious that our government is spending way too much
money and we're all in debt. The country's in debt.
(30:32):
I am in debt. It's becoming harder to live a
normal life on a decent budget for us everyday citizens.
And again, instead of doing that he wants to go
after the auditor because the auditor called out his authority,
his kingdom for waste. It's like three hundred and thirty
(30:53):
three hundred and thirty million dollars in waste that he found.
I guarantee Delbert greenlit half of that. And and then
Delbert's following this extremely livele ideology with DII and of
course some other bills that are one hundred percent designed
just to make us more liberal state and protect his
(31:13):
real supporters, you know, the rich and powerful business owners,
powerful corporations, billion dollar corporations. And we're gonna be talking
about that next week for sure, is the there's a
bill I just didn't have time to go into to
produce an episode. And there's another bill on the national
level I really want to go into next week with Graves.
(31:34):
But that's just Delbert back at it again. I'm not
even shocked. But something that's even less shocking and sad
that this has happened in Mississippi is early voting, one
(31:55):
of the Mississippi Democrats' main platforms. Delbert help get it
through so as we all know, early voting for people
who are not handicap who honestly can't avoid it. And
they're like, oh, it's helping people who are who work
for a living, the working man doing that crap. It's
(32:18):
not for the working man. It's so they can rig elections.
But the Senate passed an early voting bill. Under Bill
twenty six fifty four, voters would not need approval or
an excuse to vote early to cast ballots until noon
the Saturday before the election. The Senate bill passed. Our
bill was passing the Senate with the same name in
(32:39):
twenty twenty four, but died in the House. This bill
would replace in person voting absent in person absently voting
that begins forty five days before the elections. And I'm
pretty sure, Oh, Chris McDaniel made the news. Good for
him that it passed the Oh no, it's headed to
(33:05):
the House consideration. It passed February eleventh to thirty nine
to twelve votes. If you want to know how corrupt
and how many rhinos we have in Mississippi, there you go.
It's just absolutely crazy. And Governor Tate reeves, I'll give
(33:26):
them credit with credits, dude, issue this statement. I believe
Mississippians want our elected officials to make our elections more
secure and harder and sheet. In fact, after the twenty
twenty elections, Republicans are demanding it. Unfortunately, Secretary Jeremy England
joined every Senate Democrat today to do the exact opposite
(33:46):
with his no Excuse Early Voting bill on top, which
is one of the top priorities of the Mississippi Democratic
Party's posted on social media. And the funny thing is
Delbert Democrat. If you don't think Delbert's got his hand
in this, you are just absolutely not paying attention at all.
(34:09):
And England, Senator England is actually one of the people
who lied when Chris McDaniel was running for office and
full on helped Delbert win this election. So if that
doesn't tell you where he stands, I don't know what will.
But I'm pulling up the quote right now because I
(34:32):
want to quote directly because the website is not going
to give Chris his full vote because quote because Chris
just can never catch a break when it comes to
being probably the best, if not one hunder the best
(34:52):
conservative in Mississippi. Even out of office, he still probably is.
But I'm pulling this up now. Let's see here I
think I found it ah, here it is. I've never
(35:17):
seen a grown man have at down in a public
down over being bullied. Senator England is saying he's being
bullied by Chris McDaniel and the governor. And Chris goes
on to say, this guy, Senator Jeremy England, stood in
an attack ad for devil host and called me a loser,
a liar, and oh no, a loser, lied about my
(35:39):
record and trast my supporters. And now that he's being
held accountable, he's sobbing like a child. Everything I've said
is fully document in his own attack at it, his
social media post in twenty twenty three, and the hundreds
of my supporters who witnessed his nasty and unprofessional behavior.
And now he wants to play the victim, pathetic. He's
an insecure little hell, a test for approval and confirmation
(36:02):
as he wallows in self pity as proof his own
line posts have become needy, fragile, swell and vindictive at
the least, manlike behaviors imaginal par for the course. Now,
of course, this article just says Chris said he was
nasty for calling Chris McDaniel's supporters garbage and trash to
(36:29):
that in three, saying England was wrong for tearing was
wrong for tearing Conservatis down, proudly announcing he doesn't support
President Trump again leaving out a couple of things that
Chris McDaniel said, like the fact that Senator England lied
in a campaign ad about Chris McDaniel's record, saying Chris
(36:50):
didn't vote for something, and then in black and white,
if you go look up Chris's voting record, you see
that Chris voted for this. And I think it was
like one of that strong porn bill that passed a
couple of years ago, you know, trying to get that
out of here in Mississippi. He was a christ didn't.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
Vote for this.
Speaker 3 (37:05):
He wants, you know, our children to be exposed U
porn and then you can go back and vote r C.
Chris voted for that. Chris voted for probably more of
bills than any other senator because he took his job seriously.
And so again he's a liar. He's trying to play
(37:26):
the victim and it is just hilarious. And England responded
by saying early voting something that is not owned by
one party or another. Though I will say I truly
believe Republicans will get behind it get left behind if
we don't get on board. A prime examples recent history,
(37:46):
we saw our Republicans lose the presidental election in twenty
twenty while we were stun and ignored presidential voting. However,
in twenty twenty four, Republicans embraced and promoted early voting
in twenty four and we won big. So what he's
leading out is because of the utterly voting in twenty
twenty there was so much voter fraud that that is
(38:06):
what even brought this up for the Republican Party, and
that's the reason President Trump lost. And in twenty twenty four,
Trump just had to swallow a bullet and promote it
and try to get people out there to stop another
election steal. That's the whole reason Trump did it. He's
leaving that whole part out and not also and also
(38:26):
trying his best not to address the fact that he
just passed one of the Democratic Party's most sought after
bills to get early voting in Mississippi. And if we
get early voting Mississippi, you can start seeing a lot
of corrupt elections because we already have a lot of
corrupt politicians in Misissippi, and it's only going to get worse.
(38:46):
But welcome to the mad House, as I would say,
we have started strong. Are ready? Can't you feel it
coming in the air tonight?
Speaker 1 (38:59):
So to speak.
Speaker 3 (39:00):
We're going to take one quick commercial break again, and
we'll be right back after these messages. All right, Well,
back with the last story today and just something I
want to talk about it. I feel like we're going
to talk about it a bit more in the future,
and I know that Sam and Graves talked about it
(39:22):
a bit last week. Of course I don't.
Speaker 1 (39:26):
Yeah, I'm doing the break, but it is.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
A very important thing in my opinion. Is you know,
I found a report by the n PR, you know,
sulking over the fact that the Trump administration kills nearly
all the US AID programs and there I'm not even
(39:50):
going to read the article because they're basically they're on
a hissy fit.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
Over this.
Speaker 3 (39:56):
But I want to tell you one of the reasons
why Trump is cutting this. And again I'm not I
with all the stuff going down to Mississippi. I'm honestly
counting on Graves to help me cover national news of
the federal news because I haven't been able to keep
really my eye on the ball of what Trump's doing.
I'm hoping that, you know, after its kind of calms
(40:17):
down in Mississippi, we can talk a bit more national
news if Graves is here or if Graves can't be
here like tonight. But you know, I did find this
very interesting. You know, us AID secretly funded luxuries for
Ukraine models. And again liberals are just so fired up
(40:46):
that Trump is going after us AID acting like it's
perfectly fine, nothing is wrong, and I'm sitting here like
everything is wrong. So listen to this real quick. This
is what we're funding. Our tax paying dollars are not
going to California, They're not going to North Carolina. They're
not going to the places that were hit by this
(41:07):
awful hurricane. They just get seven hundred bucks.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
Look at this.
Speaker 3 (41:10):
The Ukraine got one hundred and fifty thousand dollars for
a modern woman's attire company, one hundred and twenty eight
thousand dollars for a trade mission for fashion design houses
or house, one hundred and twenty six thousand dollars for
a photographer for the fashion design publications, one hundred and
(41:33):
sixty one thousand dollars for a for kitware contemporary kitwear,
eighty four thousand dollars for a luxury luxury bride bridle band,
and eighty four thousand dollars for a marketplace or a
(41:57):
marketplace for a designer pieces inspired by folk crafts. So
that is what our money went to. And you know,
if you're not paying attention, you know, I can do
some quick adding, But that's where our money is going to.
And it's so crazy to me that this is how
(42:17):
my tax dollars are being spent. And the Democrats are
more concerned about the fact that we're cutting these programs
than the fact that we are paying for them. And
I got the total that is seven hundred and thirty
(42:41):
three thousand dollars of our money that went to this crap,
to this crap, seven hundred and thirty three thousand dollars
went to this stupidity, utter stupidity funded secretly by USAID.
(43:02):
You know, I got this information from the Daily Wire
and you can go see it. If you don't believe me,
you can check all this stuff out. And it is
just mind blowing. And again, Democrats didn't want any a
person going to check where we put We've been sending them.
(43:22):
We've been sending them billions of dollars, and the Democrats said,
we don't need to know how this is money being
how this money's being spent. Why, because they just wanted
to give them money. They wanted to give them our
money instead of trying to, I don't know, pay off
our debts, secure our borders, our help victims of a
natural disaster in their own country. We're using our tax
(43:44):
paying dollars to make sure some lovely models in the
Ukraine get some nice stuff. And please remember, there in
the middle of a war with Russia. I can't remember
now it's been so long if they've and declared war,
but they are in a full fledged battle for their lives,
(44:05):
and this is what they're spending money on. So if
that doesn't tell you. And also the Ukrainian presidents of
spending elections to save democracy so he could save his nation.
It's the stupidest crap I've ever heard in my life.
And it just continues and continues to blow my mind
(44:28):
that everybody is just okay with this. But we're gonna
talk about that more next week. I'm gonna go ahead
and wrap it up tonight, folks, As I said, it
is three in the morning for me right now, I
have to get up at seven to get back to work,
so I'm gonna try to catch some quick wet rest
get this episode uploaded. Probably by the time I do that,
(44:48):
it will be close to three point forty, so I'm
gonna go ahead and end it here tonight, folks, if
you don't mind. Again, we had a much longer episode
early on in the week because of just how my
schedule fail. Even though we were able to get this
episode on out on time, but make sure to go
check it out. It's a one hour and twenty minutes.
(45:09):
Graves and Sam do a great job jumping into federal
news and stuff like this. As I said, they even
touch on two topics that I'm really going to enjoy
talking about in the near future. So make sure to
go support that episode, leave a five star review comment,
or share this episode out as well, and make sure
to go check out Conservative Colonel dot com our website
(45:31):
to us find ways to support the show and to
be able to easily find our content. With that being said,
God bless America and God bless Mississippi.